have both Eastern and Western features.
Kyushu dialects are orange; southern Kyushu is quite distinctive. types. The divide between Kyoto and Tokyo types is used as the Eastern–Western Japanese boundary in the main map. There are several generally similar approaches to classifying Japanese dialects. Misao Tōjō classified mainland Japanese dialects into three groups: Eastern, Western and Kyūshū dialects. Mitsuo Okumura classified Kyushu dialects as a subclass of Western Japanese. These theories are mainly based on grammatical differences between east and west, but
Haruhiko Kindaichi classified mainland Japanese into concentric circular three groups: inside (Kansai, Shikoku, etc.), middle (Western Kantō, Chūbu, Chūgoku, etc.) and outside (Eastern Kantō, Tōhoku, Izumo, Kyushu, Hachijō, etc.) based on systems of accent, phoneme and conjugation.
Eastern and Western Japanese A primary distinction exists between Eastern and Western Japanese. This is a long-standing divide that occurs in both language and culture. Tokugawa points out the distinct eating habits, shapes of tools and utensils. One example is the kind of fish eaten in both areas. While the Eastern region eats more salmon, the West consumes more seabream. The map in the box at the top of this page divides the two along phonological lines. West of the dividing line, the more complex Kansai-type
pitch accent is found; east of the line, the simpler Tokyo-type accent is found, though Tokyo-type accents also occur further west, on the other side of Kansai. However, this
isogloss largely corresponds to several grammatical distinctions as well: West of the pitch-accent isogloss: • The perfective form of
-u verbs such as
harau 'to pay' is
harōta (or minority
harota or
haruta), showing
u-onbin, rather than Eastern (and Standard)
haratta • The perfective form of
-su verbs such as
otosu 'to drop' is also
otoita in Western Japanese (largely apart from Kansai dialect) vs.
otoshita in Eastern • The imperative of
-ru (ichidan) verbs such as
miru 'to look' is
miyo or
mii rather than Eastern
miro (or minority
mire, though Kyushu dialect also uses
miro or
mire) • The adverbial form of
-i adjectival verbs such as
hiroi 'wide' is
hirō (or minority
hirū), showing
u-onbin, for example
hirōnaru (to become wide), rather than Eastern
hiroku, for example
hirokunaru (to become wide) • The negative form of verbs is
-nu or
-n rather than
-nai or
-nee, and uses a different verb stem; thus
suru 'to do' is
senu or
sen rather than
shinai or
shinee (apart from
Sado Island, which uses
shinai) • The
copula is
da in Eastern and
ja or
ya in Western Japanese, though Sado as well as some dialects further west such as
San'in use
da [see map at right] • The verb
iru 'to exist' in Eastern and
oru in Western, though the Wakayama dialect also uses
aru and some Kansai and Fukui subdialects use both While these grammatical isoglosses are close to the pitch-accent line given in the map, they do not follow it exactly. Apart from Sado Island, which has Eastern
shinai and
da, all of the Western features are found west of the pitch-accent line, though a few Eastern features may crop up again further west (
da in San'in,
miro in Kyushu). East of the line, however, there is a zone of intermediate dialects which have a mixture of Eastern and Western features. Echigo dialect has
harōta, though not
miyo, and about half of it has
hirōnaru as well. In Gifu, all Western features are found apart from pitch accent and
harōta; Aichi has
miyo and
sen, and in the west (
Nagoya dialect)
hirōnaru as well: These features are substantial enough that Toshio Tsuzuku classifies Gifu–Aichi dialect as Western Japanese. Western Shizuoka (Enshū dialect) has
miyo as its single Western Japanese feature. Another feature that the modern Tokyo dialect shares with Kyoto is the preservation of the vowel sequences , , and : in Eastern dialects, these tend to undergo coalescence and be replaced by , and respectively. Examples of words that originated in Kyoto and were adopted by Tokyo are
yaru ("to give"),
kaminari ("thunder") and
asatte ("two days from today").
Kyushu Japanese Kyushu dialects are classified into three groups,
Hichiku dialect,
Hōnichi dialect and
Satsugu (Kagoshima) dialect, and have several distinctive features: • as noted above, Eastern-style imperatives
miro ~ mire rather than Western Japanese
miyo •
ka-adjectives in Hichiku and Satsugu rather than Western and Eastern
i-adjectives, as in
samuka for
samui 'cold',
kuyaka for
minikui 'ugly' and
nukka for
atsui 'warm' • the
nominalization and question particle
to except for Kitakyushu and Oita, versus Western and Eastern
no, as in
tottō to? for
totte iru no? 'is this taken?' and
iku to tai or
ikuttai for
iku no yo 'I'll go' • the directional particle
sai (Standard
e and
ni), though Eastern Tohoku dialect use a similar particle
sa • the emphatic
sentence-final particles
tai and
bai in Hichiku and Satsugu (Standard
yo) • a concessive particle
batten for
dakedo 'but, however' in Hichiku and Satsugu, though Eastern Tohoku Aomori dialect has a similar particle
batte • is pronounced and palatalizes
s, z, t, d, as in
mite and
sode , though this is a conservative (
Late Middle Japanese) pronunciation found with
s, z (
sensei ) in scattered areas throughout Japan like the Umpaku dialect. • as some subdialects in Shikoku and Chugoku, but generally not elsewhere, the accusative particle
o resyllabifies a noun:
honno or
honnu for
hon-o 'book',
kakyū for
kaki-o 'persimmon'. • is often dropped, for
koi 'this' versus Western and Eastern Japanese
kore •
vowel reduction is frequent especially in Satsugu and
Gotō Islands, as in
in for
inu 'dog' and
kuQ for
kubi 'neck' • Kyushu dialects share some lexical items with Ryukyuan languages, some of which appear to be innovations. Some scholars have proposed that Kyushu dialects and Ryukyuan languages are the same language group within the Japonic family. Much of Kyushu either lacks pitch accent or has its own, distinctive accent. Kagoshima dialect is so distinctive that some have classified it as a fourth branch of Japanese, alongside Eastern, Western, and the rest of Kyushu.
Hachijō Japanese A small group of dialects spoken in
Hachijō-jima and
Aogashima, islands south of Tokyo, as well as the
Daitō Islands east of Okinawa. Hachijō dialect is quite divergent and sometimes thought to be a primary branch of Japanese. It retains an abundance of inherited ancient Eastern Japanese features.
Cladogram The relationships between the dialects are approximated in the following
cladogram: == Theories ==